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1. ABC Addresses Outcry Against Crimes Committed by Illegals "We're going to take 'A Closer Look' now at how a brutal triple murder in New Jersey is fueling the outcry across the country against illegal immigrants," fill-in ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas announced Tuesday night in setting up a look at a problem largely avoided by the mainstream media. Reminding viewers of "the senseless shootings of three college students in the city of Newark," Vargas related how "two of the suspects were in this country illegally. And some are saying it's a crime that would never have occurred if immigration laws were enforced." Reporter Jake Tapper explained in his World News piece that "their presence in Newark, a city hospitable to illegal immigrants, what conservatives are calling a 'sanctuary city,' is now part of the debate over illegal immigration." After soundbites from Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo and Newt Gingrich castigating the city for not enforcing immigration laws, Tapper noted how there's "a rising hostility to illegal immigrants, not just among conservatives, but in the inner city." To illustrate, Tapper ran soundbites from three people on the street who all argued for a crackdown on illegals. 2. CNN's Cafferty Deplores Dodd for Arguing Against Impeaching Bush In the 7pm EDT hour of Tuesday's The Situation Room on CNN, Jack Cafferty expressed disappointment in Democratic presidential candidate Chris Dodd for rejecting efforts to impeach President Bush because of how it would hurt Democratic chances in 2008. "So, Senator Dodd is putting the election prospects of the Democratic Party next year ahead of whether or not President Bush might be guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors of a kind which would mandate his removal from office," Cafferty lamented. He noted that "Congress's job is oversight of the executive branch" and then, he sniffed, with a disapproving shake of his head: "Unless, of course, that oversight interferes with getting elected." Cafferty soon reiterated his displeasure with the liberal Connecticut Senator: "It's a pretty amazing statement to come out of Senator Dodd's mouth." 3. Hume Highlights Studies Showing Warming 'Scare Vastly Overblown' Citing recent peer-reviewed studies, Brit Hume informed viewers of his Fox News Channel program on Tuesday night that though "many media outlets...portray man-made global warming as a certified fact and those who deny it as conspirators," several "skeptics are increasingly certain that the scare is vastly overblown." In his "Grapevine" segment, Hume pointed to a study by a Brookhaven National Lab scientist who "contends that the Earth's climate is only about one-third as sensitive to carbon dioxide as the UN's recent climate study claims," a Belgian Weather Institute report "that carbon dioxide does not have a decisive role in global warming," a "study by two Chinese scientists" that discovered "CO2's role in warming is 'vastly exaggerated'" and "new research by University of Washington mathematicians" that "shows a correlation between high solar activity and periods of global warming." 4. New York Times Spies Phony Dangers in FISA Legislation The New York Times ventured where even the ACLU fears to tread: "Broad new surveillance powers approved by Congress this month could allow the Bush administration to conduct spy operations that go well beyond wiretapping to include -- without court approval -- certain types of physical searches on American soil and the collection of Americans' business records, Democratic Congressional officials and other experts said." Sunday's lead story focused on the alleged dangers hidden in the updated version of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act recently passed by Congress and signed into law by Bush. "Concerns Raised On Wider Spying Under New Law" emanated from James Risen and Eric Lichtblau, the same pair of reporters who put the terror-surveillance debate on public display back in December 2005 with a scoop that revealed the details of the classified National Security Agency program, which detailed methods of surveillance of international communications of terrorism suspects. 5. MSNBC's Scarborough Mocks Concept of CNN's 'God's Warriors' On Tuesday's Morning Joe, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough mocked the very concept of CNN's "God's Warriors" specials on Muslim, Christian and Jewish extremism. Anticipating the possible moral relativism that the Christiane Amanpour-hosted series may take, Scarborough sarcastically observed: "They're going to study Muslim extremism, then Christian extremism, because we know Christians have, have slaughtered thousands of people across the globe in bombings." Comparing the CNN anchor to a liberal talk show host, an incredulous Scarborough added: "Is this Rosie O'Donnell or is this Christine Amanpour?" Returning to the subject later in the 7am EDT hour, Scarborough derided the cable network again: "But to say, as CNN appears to be saying, that Muslim extremism and Jewish extremism and Christian extremism, sort of, is equal, that there is moral equivalence...between those three, that's just ridiculous." 6. 'Top Ten Good Things About Marrying Into the Bush Family' Letterman's "Top Ten Good Things About Marrying Into the Bush Family." ABC Addresses Outcry Against Crimes Committed by Illegals "We're going to take 'A Closer Look' now at how a brutal triple murder in New Jersey is fueling the outcry across the country against illegal immigrants," fill-in ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas announced Tuesday night in setting up a look at a problem largely avoided by the mainstream media. Reminding viewers of "the senseless shootings of three college students in the city of Newark," Vargas related how "two of the suspects were in this country illegally. And some are saying it's a crime that would never have occurred if immigration laws were enforced." Reporter Jake Tapper explained in his World News piece that "their presence in Newark, a city hospitable to illegal immigrants, what conservatives are calling a 'sanctuary city,' is now part of the debate over illegal immigration." After soundbites from Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo and Newt Gingrich castigating the city for not enforcing immigration laws, Tapper noted how there's "a rising hostility to illegal immigrants, not just among conservatives, but in the inner city." To illustrate, Tapper ran soundbites from three people on the street who all argued for a crackdown on illegals, before he concluded with a nod to the other side and why that view doesn't matter: "Liberal immigration activists argue that illegal immigrants do not commit violent crimes more than any other group. But for many in mourning here in Newark, two illegal immigrants may have been two too many." [This item was posted late Tuesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for the August 21 World News story: ELIZABETH VARGAS: We're going to take "A Closer Look" now at how a brutal triple murder in New Jersey is fueling the outcry across the country against illegal immigrants. We've told you about the killings, the senseless shootings of three college students in the city of Newark. It turns out that two of the suspects were in this country illegally. And some are saying it's a crime that would never have occurred if immigration laws were enforced. Jake Tapper has the story.
JAKE TAPPER: An illegal immigrant from Honduras, Melvin Jovel, was arraigned this morning for the shocking execution-style killings of three promising college students in Newark, New Jersey, this month. Jovel joins others in custody for the crimes, including fellow illegal immigrant Jose Carranza from Peru, who's been arrested twice before. Their presence in Newark, a city hospitable to illegal immigrants, what conservatives are calling a "sanctuary city," is now part of the debate over illegal immigration. The longer, online, version of Tapper's report as posted on ABCNews.com: abcnews.go.com
CNN's Cafferty Deplores Dodd for Arguing Against Impeaching Bush In the 7pm EDT hour of Tuesday's The Situation Room on CNN, Jack Cafferty expressed disappointment in Democratic presidential candidate Chris Dodd for rejecting efforts to impeach President Bush because of how it would hurt Democratic chances in 2008. "So, Senator Dodd is putting the election prospects of the Democratic Party next year ahead of whether or not President Bush might be guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors of a kind which would mandate his removal from office," Cafferty lamented. He noted that "Congress's job is oversight of the executive branch" and then, he sniffed, with a disapproving shake of his head: "Unless, of course, that oversight interferes with getting elected." Cafferty soon reiterated his displeasure with the liberal Connecticut Senator: "It's a pretty amazing statement to come out of Senator Dodd's mouth." All but one of the e-mails he read about 40 minutes later either denounced Bush or Dick Cheney or called for Bush's impeachment. The first one declared that "a majority of Democrats and Independents would support impeachment of the entire administration," the next castigated Congress's "cowardice" in not being more aggressive toward the administration, another ridiculed Dodd as a "moron," and the next to last e-mail Cafferty read aloud contended "there will be plenty of time to send George Bush to jail after he leaves Washington, and after more incontrovertible evidence of his malfeasance comes out." Finally, Cafferty chuckled at this missive: "As much as I'd love to see Bush impeached, you have to ask yourself this: Who would take over? A man who shot an old man in the face while trying to shoot birds that can't fly." [This item was posted Tuesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Just before the 2006 election, Cafferty made clear his desire for Bush's impeachment and that of his viewers. The November 3, 2006 CyberAlert, "Cafferty: Bush Deserves Impeachment, Finds 'Amazing 98%' Agree," recounted: CNN's Jack Cafferty listed a litany of supposed Bush misdeeds and how Bill Clinton "was impeached for telling a lie" before posing his "Cafferty File" question in the 7pm EST hour of Thursday's The Situation Room: "If the Republicans lose the election Tuesday, what should happen to President Bush?" Naturally, Cafferty's strong suggestion that President George W. Bush deserves the same generated matching e-mails, yet Cafferty expressed astonishment: "It's amazing. 98 percent of the ones that I read -- and I looked at several hundred of them -- said impeach him....There's a lot of anger out there over what this man's done." Cafferty had charged: "This President has pulled off a power grab in the name of the war on terror the likes of which this country hasn't seen in a very long time. And in the process, people who are a lot smarter than I am suggest that he has broken this nation's laws over and over and over again. From invading a sovereign nation without provocation to torturing prisoners to the NSA spy program, to holding people without a right to a court hearing or a lawyer, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera." Amongst the e-mails Cafferty read, one declared: "Of course George Bush deserves to be impeached, and he should also be thrown in jail." Another writer recommended: "He should be 'legally' water-boarded until he can recite the Bill of Rights and define habeas corpus." END of Excerpt
For the November 3, 2006 CyberAlert article in full: www.mediaresearch.org
The DesMoines Register story: desmoinesregister.com
Hume Highlights Studies Showing Warming 'Scare Vastly Overblown' Citing recent peer-reviewed studies, Brit Hume informed viewers of his Fox News Channel program on Tuesday night that though "many media outlets...portray man-made global warming as a certified fact and those who deny it as conspirators," several "skeptics are increasingly certain that the scare is vastly overblown." In his "Grapevine" segment, Hume pointed to a study by a Brookhaven National Lab scientist who "contends that the Earth's climate is only about one-third as sensitive to carbon dioxide as the UN's recent climate study claims," a Belgian Weather Institute report "that carbon dioxide does not have a decisive role in global warming," a "study by two Chinese scientists" that discovered "CO2's role in warming is 'vastly exaggerated'" and "new research by University of Washington mathematicians" that "shows a correlation between high solar activity and periods of global warming."
Hume was apparently relaying highlights from an August 20 posting, "New Peer-Reviewed Scientific Studies Chill Global Warming Fears," by Marc Morano of the minority staff of the Senate's Committee on Environment and Public Works. Morano's rundown summarized more than a dozen studies and reports: epw.senate.gov For more on the Newsweek cover story Hume cited, check the August 8 CyberAlert article, "Newsweek Cover Story Screed Against 'Denial Machine' on Warming," online at: www.mrc.org Also see the August 16 CyberAlert item, "NBC News Joins Newsweek in Smearing Global Warming 'Deniers,'" online at: www.mrc.org
New York Times Spies Phony Dangers in FISA Legislation The New York Times ventured where even the ACLU fears to tread: "Broad new surveillance powers approved by Congress this month could allow the Bush administration to conduct spy operations that go well beyond wiretapping to include -- without court approval -- certain types of physical searches on American soil and the collection of Americans' business records, Democratic Congressional officials and other experts said." Sunday's lead story focused on the alleged dangers hidden in the updated version of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act recently passed by Congress and signed into law by Bush. "Concerns Raised On Wider Spying Under New Law" emanated from James Risen and Eric Lichtblau, the same pair of reporters who put the terror-surveillance debate on public display back in December 2005 with a scoop that revealed the details of the classified National Security Agency program, which detailed methods of surveillance of international communications of terrorism suspects. See: www.timeswatch.org
Andrew McCarthy of the Foundation for Defense and Democracies responded, at National Review Online, to the Sunday story: [This item is adapted from a posting, by Clay Waters, on the MRC's TimesWatch site: www.timeswatch.org ]
Back to the August 19 news story by Risen and Lichtblau: McCarthy noted: "Nor, moreover, does it seem plausible that, as the Times report suggests, Democrats voted for the reform bill without grasping what was in it. This was no omnibus, multi-volume budget extravaganza. We're talkin' 14 double-spaced pages -- straightforward, easily read, and reread in nothing flat, bereft of crevices for hiding explosive provisions."
For McCarthy's August 21 retort in full: article.nationalreview.com But as McCarthy sharply pointed out, the "experts" that agree with Risen and Lichtblau's strange interpretation were never actually identified.
The Times continued: "Some civil rights advocates said they suspected that the administration made the language of the bill intentionally vague to allow it even broader discretion over wiretapping decisions. Whether intentional or not, the end result -- according to top Democratic aides and other experts on national security law -- is that the legislation may grant the government the right to collect a range of information on American citizens inside the United States without warrants, as long as the administration asserts that the spying concerns the monitoring of a person believed to be overseas.... For the Sunday article in full: www.nytimes.com Check TimesWatch daily for the latest instances of liberal bias in the New York Times: www.timeswatch.org
MSNBC's Scarborough Mocks Concept of CNN's 'God's Warriors' On Tuesday's Morning Joe, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough mocked the very concept of CNN's "God's Warriors" specials on Muslim, Christian and Jewish extremism. Anticipating the possible moral relativism that the Christiane Amanpour-hosted series may take, Scarborough sarcastically observed: "They're going to study Muslim extremism, then Christian extremism, because we know Christians have, have slaughtered thousands of people across the globe in bombings." Comparing the CNN anchor to a liberal talk show host, an incredulous Scarborough added: "Is this Rosie O'Donnell or is this Christine Amanpour?" (In 2006, O'Donnell famously stated that "radical Christianity is just as threatening as radical Islam." See the September 13 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org ) Returning to the subject later in the 7am EDT hour, Scarborough derided the cable network again: "But to say, as CNN appears to be saying, that Muslim extremism and Jewish extremism and Christian extremism, sort of, is equal, that there is moral equivalence...between those three, that's just ridiculous." [This item, by Scott Whitlock, was posted Tuesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The August 21 CyberAlert item, "CNN's 'God's Warriors' Equates Christian Activists with Taliban?," previewed the August 21-23 CNN mini-series: www.mrc.org An AP article about the series lends credence to the idea that Amanpour would promote moral equivalence between Islamic terrorists and a "fundamentalist Christian group." An excerpt: The segment on Christians explores BattleCry in some depth, digging at the roots of an organization that fights against some of the cruder elements of popular culture and urges teenagers to be chaste. In noting how girls at some BattleCry events are encouraged to wear long dresses, Amanpour asks the group's leader how it is different from the Taliban. For the AP story in full: news.yahoo.com CNN's page on the "God's Warriors" shows scheduled to air from 9-11pm EDT Wednesday (on Islam) and Thursday (on Christianity), with video excerpts: www.cnn.com The first installment, on Judaism, ran Tuesday night. Each two-hour episode will re-run at midnight EDT and will no doubt be re-run again this weekend or over Labor Day weekend. A partial transcript of the discussion during the August 21 edition of Morning Joe on MSNBC:
# 7:20am EDT. Joe Scarborough: "I am upset a little bit about something right now. And I went on TV Newser and I and saw that CNN and Christiane Amanpour, they're going to study religious extremism. She's got this special. She's going to be on Larry King tonight. I'm going to be watching 'cause I'm going to be watching it because I'm going to be a little bothered if they're trying to say that there is moral relativity. They're going to study Muslim extremism, then Christian extremism, because we know Christians have, have slaughtered thousands of people across the globe in bombings-"
# 7:49am. Scarborough: "Chris, I understand though, we have been getting some e-mails regarding this CNN special report on extremism. Muslim extremism, Jewish extremism and Christian extremism. Right?"
'Top Ten Good Things About Marrying Into the Bush Family' From the August 20 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Good Things About Marrying Into the Bush Family." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. Great deals on Fallujah honeymoon 9. You'll inherit President Bush's extensive collection of Chuck Norris memorabilia 8. It's a good bet the wedding reception will have an open bar 7. Might see Cheney shoot an old guy -- still a reference, folks 6. Learning from Grandma Barbara how to spit chaw 5. Every Wednesday is Taco Night 4. What could be more fascinating than learning what makes Jeb tick? 3. If half the family hates you, you still have better approval rating that George Bush 2. W. can lend you the "Mission Accomplished" banner to put up in the bedroom 1. Little chance you'll be the dumbest guy in the family
-- Brent Baker
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